NEW YORK — As gays and
lesbians rack up victories in their quest for marriage equality and
other rights, transgender Americans are following in their path —
hopefully, but less smoothly.
There have been some important legal
rulings and political votes in recent months bolstering transgender
rights. But those have coincided with an upsurge of hostility from some
conservative activists and an acknowledgement by transgender-rights
leaders that they face distinct challenges in building public support
for their cause.
"My sense is that we are 20 years behind the
mainstream gay and lesbian movement in terms of public understanding,"
said Michael Silverman, executive director of the Transgender Legal
Defense and Education Fund.
"I see a lessening of anti-gay
rhetoric as the American people get to know gays and lesbians," he said.
"But fewer Americans know transgender people that way at this point,
and that presents an opening that opponents of transgender rights can
exploit."
One high point for transgender activists came in
November when the U.S. Senate approved the Employment Non-Discrimination
Act, which would ban workplace discrimination on the basis of gender
identity as well as sexual orientation. Only 17 states have such
protections for transgender people.
However, House Speaker John
Boehner has indicated that his Republican-controlled chamber may not
take up the bill, and much of the criticism directed at it by social
conservative activists has focused on transgender-related matters.
"This
law is about forcing Bible-believing Christians to deny their faith
rather than inconvenience cross-dressing, gender-confused adults," said
Rick Scarborough, chairman of Tea Party Unity.
The Rev. Louis
Sheldon, chairman of the Traditional Values Coalition, evoked possible
application of the bill to school hiring, asserting that "students as
young as 5 or 6 years old will be forced to watch should their teacher
choose to transform herself from Marvin to Mary."
Similar rhetoric
has surfaced in California, where conservative groups hope to place a
measure on the November 2014 ballot to repeal a new law giving
transgender students the choice of playing on either boys' or girls'
sports teams and allowing them to use either gender's restrooms.
The
National Organization for Marriage, which since 2007 has been a leading
opponent of same-sex marriage, decided this fall to join the repeal
campaign, even though the California law does not deal with marriage.
"We
can stop this outrageous law in its tracks, and thwart the efforts of
homosexual activists to use vulnerable children as a weapon in their
culture war," wrote the organization's president, Brian Brown, in a
fundraising appeal to supporters.
Repeal backers have submitted
620,000 signatures supporting a ballot measure; those are now being
reviewed to see if enough of them are valid.
Dru Levasseur,
director of Lambda Legal's Transgender Rights Project, interpreted the
wave of hostile rhetoric as a positive sign.
"The fact we've had
so many victories on behalf of gays and lesbians means transgender
people are now on the radar — and with it comes the nastiness," he said.
"There have been so many advances regarding marriage that the
anti-equality groups are shifting to target the next set of upcoming
victories on transgender issues."
Same-sex marriage will soon be legal in 16 states, and opinion polls show that a majority of Americans now support it.
For
the most part, transgender activists have welcomed the developments on
marriage equality, while expressing some concern that issues of more
direct importance to them were not getting sufficient attention from
national gay-rights groups.
Health care coverage figures among
these issues. In New York state — one of the most liberal when it comes
to gay rights — activists recently launched a campaign to change what
they consider to be a discriminatory regulation barring Medicaid
payments for purposes related to gender reassignment
Dean Spade, a
transgender law professor spending this year at Columbia Law School,
said other pressing issues include high rates of incarceration and
poverty among transgender people, as well as violence directed against
them. He has questioned why some activists are instead placing a
priority on helping transgender people pursue military careers.
"We should put our energies into relieving the worst conditions placed on people," Spade said.
By
any measure, there have been some significant gains for transgender
Americans over the past decade, including decisions by scores of
municipalities and companies to extend protections and benefits to them.
In
2011, the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta overturned the
firing of a Georgia legislative employee who was dismissed after telling
her boss she was about to undergo sex change surgery. In June, the
Colorado Division of Civil Rights ruled that a suburban Colorado Springs
school district had discriminated against Coy Mathis, a 6-year-old
transgender girl, by preventing her from using the girls' bathroom.
Yet
in the western Colorado town of Delta, a school board member suggested
at a public meeting in October that use of girls' locker rooms by boys
would be acceptable only if they'd been castrated. In Arizona, a
Republican legislator introduced a bill this year that would have made
it a crime for a transgender person to use a bathroom other than the one
designated for his or her birth sex. After an outcry from advocacy
groups, the measure was modified, and then withdrawn — at least for this
year.
Mara Keisling, executive director of the National Center
for Transgender Equality, says the best strategy for combatting such
attitudes would be to enable a broad swath of Americans to become more
familiar with transgender people.
"A huge number of Americans now
have gay family members, gay co-workers ... but most of them don't know a
transgender person, and that means we're ripe for scapegoating,"
Keisling said. "There are a lot of people in this country who just are
ignorant about us. They hear people in authority demeaning and
dehumanizing us, and they believe it."
"I think for the next few
years, until transgender people are more visible, come out at work,
we're still going to have a lot of ignorance out there," she said.
Part
of the challenge is demographic. According to demographer Gary Gates of
the UCLA School of Law's Williams Institute, an estimated 3.4 percent
of adults in the United States identify as lesbian, gay or bisexual,
while only one-tenth that many are transgender.
One of the most
prominent transgender Americans in recent months has been Chelsea
Manning, the Army private previously known as Bradley Manning, who was
sentenced to 35 years in prison for leaking classified material to
WikiLeaks. A day after the sentencing, Manning announced she wanted to
live as a woman and has requested estrogen treatments that would promote
breast development and other female characteristics.
Another
high-profile transgender figure has surfaced on "Orange is the New
Black," the hit Netflix series set in a women's prison. A transgender
character, Sophia, is played empathetically by transgender actress and
activist Laverne Cox.
However, that character is an exception
among current offerings of TV shows and films, according to GLAAD, an
advocacy group that monitors media portrayals of gays, lesbians,
bisexuals and transgender people.
In a report last month, GLAAD
examined 20 recent TV episodes that included transgender characterspho
and deemed 60 percent of them to be negative or defamatory. Common
themes, according to GLAAD, are portrayals of transgender people either
as clownish or sociopathic.
"We need to get more good images in
the media, so people can see us as regular people, not as predators,"
said Tiq Milan of GLAAD's Trans Education and Media Program.
Some conservative activists contend that many Americans will have more difficulty accepting transgender rights than gay rights.
"No
matter how one feels about homosexual rights ... there is a visceral
reaction to the obvious implications of gender identity laws," wrote
Mathew Staver, chairman of the conservative legal group Liberty Counsel,
in an email.
"One implication is men — no matter how they appear
or how they actually think or identify — being able to use women's
changing rooms," he wrote. "The majority of people will not accept such
laws."
Peter Sprigg, a senior fellow with the conservative Family
Research Council, suggested that the visible characteristics of
transgender people were problematic for some Americans.
"In many
cases, transgender people are not convincing in their appearance, and
therefore it may be more troubling to a lot of people," he said. "It's
something people really struggle with."
However, Dru Levasseur of
Lambda Legal questioned the notion that — in the court of public opinion
— transgender rights was a tougher sell than gay rights. The key to
winning more acceptance, he said, was a willingness by transgender
people to share the stories of their lives.
"Being who you are — being brave enough to be yourself. People can relate to that," he said.
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